Policy Lecture 2024 PDF
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Kwame Nkrumah University of Science and Technology
2024
Dr. Joana Akua Serwaa Ameyaw
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This lecture document covers natural resource policy and legislation, including introductions to policies, laws, and international conventions. It also includes detailed reference materials and sets up groundwork for further study.
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FRM 362 NATURAL Resources Policy and Legislation Dr. Joana Akua Serwaa Ameyaw CLASS SET-UP Assessing student expectations In one word, tell us what you would like to learn from this course https://www.menti.com/al33u1d28vte Course Outline Three main parts: 1.Introduction...
FRM 362 NATURAL Resources Policy and Legislation Dr. Joana Akua Serwaa Ameyaw CLASS SET-UP Assessing student expectations In one word, tell us what you would like to learn from this course https://www.menti.com/al33u1d28vte Course Outline Three main parts: 1.Introduction to Policies 2.Introduction to Laws and Legislation 3.International Conventions Course Outline... Introduction to Policies ā Defining policy ā Importance of policy ā Actors in policy making ā Factors affecting policies ā NR policy making ā Policy Implementation ā Policy co-ordination ā Case study of some natural resource policies Course Outline ā¦ Introduction to Laws and Legislation ā Nature and characteristics of laws ā Types of laws ā The need for laws and legislation ā Case study of NR laws and legislation Course Outlineā¦ International Conventions ā Development of international conventions ā Enforcement of conventions ā Case Study of some conventions Reference Materials āŖBirkland, T. A., 2019. An Introduction to the policy process: Theories, concepts and models of public policy making. 5th Edition, Taylor and Francis, New York, USA. āŖKraft, M. E. and Furlong, S. R., 2018. Public policy, politics, analysis and alternatives. 6th Edition. SAGE, California, USA. āŖUnger, D. H. and Siroros, P., 2011. Trying to make decisions stick: Natural Resource Policy making in Thailand. Journal of contemporary Asia, 41:2, 206-228. āŖAnderson, J. E., 2015. Public Policy making. 8th Edition, Wadsworth Cengage learning, Boston, USA. Reference Materials... āŖKortey, N. A. Francois, J., Owusu, J. G. K. Yeboah R., Amanor, K. S. & Antwi, L., 1998. Falling into place: Collaborative Resource Management in Ghana. Policy that works for forests and people No. 4. IIED, London āŖBrassil,B and Brassil D., 2011. Legal Studies. Green Giant Press, Singapore. āŖWalker, G. B. and Daniels, S. E., 2001. Natural Resource Policy and the paradox of public involvement. Journal of Sustainable Forestry, 13:1- 2, 253-269. āŖOwusu, J. G. K. (ed), 1989. Revision of Ghanaās forest policy. Proceedings of a national conference, Forestry Commission Symposia Series no. 3, Accra Ghana Reference Materialsā¦ āŖClark, T. W., 1992. Practicing natural resource management with a policy orientation. Environmental mgt. 16:4, 423-433. āŖHusch, B., 1987. Guidelines for forest policy formulation. FAO forestry paper 81. FAO Rome. āŖHummel, F. C., 1984. Forest policy ā a contribution to resource development. Martinus Nijhoff/ Dr W. Junk publishers, The Hague, the Netherlands. āŖWorell, A. C., 1970. Principles of forest policy. McGraw Hill Inc. Reference Materialsā¦ Reference Materialsā¦ Introductory exercise What is the relation between the following: oPolicy olaw olegislation Defining policy Some definitions : o The opinion or doctrine of a government or group of people o A course of action adapted and pursued by a government or any other authority in accordance with socio-economic goals to be achieved 14 Defining policy o A plan of action agreed on by a group of people with the power to carry it out o A statement by government of what it intends to do or not to do, such as a law, regulation, ruling, decision, order or a combination of these. o Public policy is what public officials within government, and by extension the citizens they represent, choose to do or not to do about public problems (Kraft and Furlong, 2015) Public problems refer to issues society widely perceives as unacceptable and therefore require intervention (e.g. environmental degradation, illegal logging, etc.) 15 Defining policyā¦ āThus generally, a policy is: āA set of guidelines āClearly define what will be done or not done āAimed at achieving some set goals/objective āThere can be different policies for achieving varying goals āe.g. Educational policy ā Environmental policy ā Fisheries policy ā Mining policy ā Forest policy ā etc. ā Policies are not limited to governments. Individuals and groups may also have their own policies. 16 What is a NR policy? āŖA set of guidelines or principles that govern the use and management of natural resources for the achievement of a societyās objectives. āŖThe policy defines the dimensions for the use and management of natural resources: āŖ Management priorities e.g.: āŖ rehabilitation of existing resources, āŖ expansion of resources, āŖ promotion of trade 17 Nature of policies āThey indicate a choice from a set of alternatives āThey may or may not be documented. āThey are made for the present and the future, drawing on lessons from the past āThey change with time āThe resource policy is dependent on the nature of the resource in question 18 Characteristic of a āgoodā policy āHas a clear goal or purpose āShould be relevant to the needs of society āWell-informed āDeveloped through transparent processes āContent and development process is ethical āOpen to amendment 19 DISCUSSION QUESTION You have been selected as part of a team tasked to review a draft natural resource policy: a. What will you look out for in the draft document to ascertain the quality of the policy? b. How will you determine the quality of the process used in policy development? 20 What is politics? Politics āŖ Politics is the study of how people get what they want āŖ A process of determining how power and resources are distributed in society without violence (who gets what, when and how) āŖ Politics is the practice and theory of influencing other people āŖ Politics is the activity through which people make, preserve and amend rules governing their lives āŖ The exercise of power in society or in specific policy decision making process āŖ Power ā the ability to get others to do what you want 22 Politics underpins policy making Categorizing public policies ā Policies can be classified in different ways and the classifications given are not mutually exclusive ā Policies may be categorized based on ā¦ Purpose Types of Political Goods activities Security Distributive Collective Membership Regulatory Private Prosperity Self ā regulatory Needs Redistributive Cochan et al. 2009 25 Categorizing based on purpose āSecurity ā providing protection from threats to lives, properties, liberties e.g. National defence, criminal law āMembership ā determining who is a member of a society and rights for different membership types āProsperity ā providing goods and services for ensuring material well-being (legal and social infrastructure for economic growth) āNeeds ā meeting essential needs e.g. education and healthcare, social security 26 Categorizing based on goods āCollective (Public) ā Goods (services) cannot be divided and so provided for the benefit of all E.g. pollution control, national defence āPrivate ā Goods provided to specific groups of people. Others can be excluded from accessing these goods E.g. access to university education 27 Categorizing based on types of political activities The Theodore Lowi categorization āŖ This was initiated in 1964 and has been modified by others over time āŖ Puts policy into three major types: āŖ Distributive āŖ Regulatory āŖ Redistributive 28 Types of policyā¦ Distributive Policy āŖ Involves granting some good or benefits to particular interest group(s) in society āŖ Usually the group of people this policy favours is not easily noticed. āŖ The cost of the policy is distributed broadly across society such that its impact is not directly felt by another group in society āŖ These policies are usually created with only minimal political conflict āŖ If benefits are distributed to a wider group, the policy becomes more consensual E.g. Agricultural subsidies, government support for public schools 29 Types of policyā¦.. Regulatory Policies āŖ These are intended to impose constraints on individuals, groups and the conduct of business āŖ Limits liberty of actions āŖ E.g. speed limits, employment regulation, public accommodation standards, environmental laws regulating pollution āŖ Theodore Lowi distinguishes two broad types: āŖ Competitive regulatory āŖ Protective regulatory 30 Regulatory Policies Competitive Regulatory Policy āŖ This is designed to limit the provision of goods and services or participation in market to one or few selected group(s) of people. āŖ This kind of policy is usually made at the state level and is not subject to much public scrutiny. 31 Regulatory Policies Protective Regulatory Policy āŖ It is aimed at protecting the public at large from the negative effect of the activities of a smaller group of people. āŖ Agreements are reached based on negotiations with the affected group 32 Regulatory Policies Cochan et al. 2009 also describes another type of regulatory policy...... āself-regulatoryā policy Here, the regulated group has authority and discretion to formulate and police their own regulation Policies developed here are usually in the interest of the regulated group , rather than the public E.g. Licensing of practitioners to determine who may or may not practice a profession 33 Types of policyā¦.. Redistributive Policies āŖ This type of policy gives benefits to a group by imposing a discernable cost on another group āŖ It is intended to manipulate the allocation of wealth, property or some valued items among social classes. āŖ This kind of policy usually generates a lot of scrutiny and conflicts 34 Types of policyā¦.. āŖ It is difficult to assign a policy to only one category using the Lowi categorization. āŖ This led to the development of the Wilsonās Cost Benefit Policy Typology. āŖ This typology is based on how a policy distributes costs and benefits. 35 Types of policyā¦.. Wilsonās Cost-Benefit Policy Typology Benefits Among few Among Many Among few Interest Group Politics Entrepreneurial Politics Costs Among Many Clientele-Oriented Majoritarian Politics Politics 36 Wilsonās Cost-Benefit Policy Typologyā¦ Interest Group Politics Costs and benefits are shared among only few groups Here conflicts are likely to arise if the interest group bearing the costs are not the same as the group enjoying the benefits 37 Wilsonās Cost-Benefit Policy Typologyā¦ Entrepreneurial Politics The cost of the policy is concentrated among a few, but the benefits are shared by a larger group Policy makers are persuaded to regulate the policy in the interest of the public, amidst opposition from the group(s) that would bear the cost Environmental policies are usually of this nature 38 Wilsonās Cost-Benefit Policy Typologyā¦ Clientele-Oriented Politics Benefits are provided for a specific group but the costs of the policy are not assigned to a definite group. They are distributed broadly among a larger group The benefiting group presses for the enactment of the policy and supports it in every way. E.g. The regulation of trade for the benefit of young/smaller industries 39 Wilsonās Cost-Benefit Policy Typologyā¦ Majoritarian Politics Here, both costs and benefits are spread out to many people Such policies are considered weak and ambiguous. 40 Why do we need natural resource policies? IMPORTANCE OF NATURAL RESOURCE POLICIES ā The importance of NR policies is rooted in the unique characteristics of the resources 1. The resources are renewable ā Has an inherent ability to be replenished over time ā within economically and socially acceptable limits. 2. Potentially destructible ā If not properly managed 3. Geographically unevenly distributed IMPORTANCE OF NATURAL RESOURCE POLICIESā¦ High value Rich timber biodiversity Well forested catchment Subsistence farm land Mine site Grazing land Tourism Commercial farm land Biofuel Human production settlement 4. Multiple uses and competing claims could result in conflicts IMPORTANCE OF NATURAL RESOURCE POLICIESā¦ A policy is therefore important for: āŖ The protection of natural resources from potential destruction āŖ It provides a guide on how the resource is to be used ā thus ensuring its efficient use āŖ Balancing stakeholder interests to ensure equity āŖ Avoiding conflict with other related sectors of the economy - e.g. Agriculture, environment, local government, etc. WHAT FACTORS AFFECT THE KIND OF POLICIES A COUNTRY MAY HAVE FOR THE MANAGEMENT OF ITS NATURAL RESOURCES? Factors Affecting NR Policies āŖ Biological āŖ Environmental āŖ State of knowledge āŖ Socio-cultural āŖ Economic āŖ Operational and administrative practicability āŖ International and National interests or commitments āŖ Policies of other sectors Factors Affecting NR Policiesā¦ Biological Nature of the resource Considers the composition of the resource o Species o Condition score o Stocking, etc Resources with different biological characteristics would have to be managed differently to ensure sustainability. Factors Affecting NR Policiesā¦ Environmental conditions āŖThis deals with the kind of climate, topography, etc. that exist where the resource is located. āŖThese affect the management of the resource. E.g. species to be grown, mode of exploitation, etc. Factors Affecting NR Policiesā¦ State of Knowledge about the resource āŖ What is known about the resource at the time of policy making affects use and management objectives and strategies. āŖ This state of knowledge depends on research, technology available and the nationās experience with managing the resource. āŖ As knowledge advances, the policy may need to be reviewed or changed. Factors Affecting NR Policiesā¦ Socio-Cultural Factors āŖ The social conditions and the culture of the people for which the resource is to be managed are important in determining priorities for management āŖ When these are overlooked, implementation of a policy would be faced with opposition and apathy. āŖ Customs and traditions āŖ Land ownership and tenure Factors Affecting NR Policiesā¦ Economic Factors āŖ Natural resources play an important role in many economies. āŖ In such countries, a separate policy on natural resources is necessary. Where the role of natural resources is not prominent, the NR policy may be a sub-component of another major policy document. āŖ A resource policy should support a nationās economic goals and interests āŖ Providing employment āŖ Promoting rural development āŖ Providing raw material for industry Factors Affecting NR Policiesā¦ Operational and Administrative Practicability of options āŖ There are usually alternative courses of action for addressing a given policy concern. āŖ The option to be chosen should consider the feasibility of implementations within the constraints of: āŖ Staff āŖ Equipment āŖ Technology āŖ Funds, etc Factors Affecting NR Policiesā¦. International and National Interests or Commitments āŖ Policy decisions would need to consider national and international priorities and commitments made. There should be no contradictions. āŖ E.g. āŖ Nationalā¦.. āŖ constitution, āŖ Medium term national development policy framework āŖ Internationalā¦..UNFCCC, CITES, etc. Factors Affecting NR Policiesā¦ Policies of other sectors āŖ The NR policy should not contradict other policies related to the resource. āŖ Some of the sectors related to the resource include: āŖ Agriculture āŖ Lands āŖ Environment āŖ Policies on taxation, foreign trade, land-use planning and pollution control for example may affect NR policies Assignment for our next meeting āŖCompile policies: āŖSearch for all the 13 case study policies āŖCreate a folder and download them for inspection Actors in Policy Determination āŖ Policies result from negotiations, debates, compromises, etc. among stakeholders on policy content. āŖ Actors in policy making are determined by the social, economic and political system of the country. āŖ Despite the kind of system in a country however, the participation and acceptance of people is vital for successful policy implementation Actors in Policy Determinationā¦ āŖ The official pronouncement of a policy is usually the responsibility of the government. However, many actors participate in determining the outcome of the policy. āŖ These actors may be categorized as: āŖ Official āŖ Unofficial āŖ Official actors are those given the responsibility of making and enforcing policies by law or constitution and thus have the power to do so. āŖ Unofficial actors are those who play a role in the policy process without the explicit legal authority (duty) to participate. Actors in Policy Determinationā¦ Official Actors These consist mainly of governmental institutions. There are three main arms of government: āŖ The Legislature āŖ The Judiciary āŖ The executive Actors in Policy Determinationā¦ The Legislature Handout (The work of the legislature) THE LAW-MAKING PROCESS IN GHANA; STRUCTURES AND PROCEDURES āŖ More often than not, the law-making process (legislative process) appears to be a complex matter understood by policy makers only. āŖ As future managers of natural resources, an understanding of the legislative process in a simplified manner is crucial. HISTORICAL OVERVIEW OF THE GHANAIAN LEGISLATURE āŖ Article 11 of the 1992 constitution vests authority to the Parliament of Ghana to oversee and exercise legislative power. āŖ Ghana has a unicameral legislature - one parliament exercising legislative functions āŖ The parliament is responsible for passing bills, which when assented to by the President, become the laws which protect the constitutional rights of all citizens. COMPOSITION OF THE PARLIAMENT OF GHANA contād The parliament of Ghana comprises of; āŖ The speaker of Parliament : The speaker is elected by the Members of Parliament or persons who are qualified to be elected as Members of Parliament. He/she presides over Parliament and enforces all standing orders. āŖ First deputy speaker : In the absence of the speaker, the first deputy speaker shall exercise all the powers of the speaker. The first deputy speaker also presides over the Appointments and the Privileges Committees. COMPOSITION OF THE PARLIAMENT OF GHANA contād āŖ Second deputy speaker : In the absence of the speaker of parliament and the first deputy speaker, the second deputy speaker shall exercise all the powers of the speaker. Additionally, he / she presides over the committee on members holding offices of profit. āŖ Majority leader: Elected from the largest political party in parliament. Assisted by a Deputy Majority leader and a Majority Chief whip. The majority leader works to advance the goals of the House in general and the majority party in particular. COMPOSITION OF THE PARLIAMENT OF GHANA contād āŖ Minority leader : Elected from the second largest political party in Parliament. Like the majority leader, the minority leader is assisted by a Deputy Minority Leader and a Chief Whip. āŖ Committees of the Parliament: Committees evaluate and analyze bills that reach parliament. This is done through investigation and inquiry into activities and administration of ministries and departments as determined by parliament. Each member of parliament is required to be a member of at least one standing committee. THE LEGISLATIVE PROCESS āŖ The legislative process refers to the various procedures by which a bill becomes a law. āŖ There are 4 stages by which the legislative process can be classified; 1. First reading 2. Second reading 3. Committee/consideration stage 4. Third reading. THE LEGISLATIVE PROCESS contād āŖ First reading; It is the first time the bill appears in parliament. The speaker reads the long title of the bill before parliament and the bill is then referred to the relevant committee to examine the bill and produce a report for the second reading. āŖ Second reading; The parliament debates the principles and policies of the bill. The Sector Minister delivers a speech explaining the implications of the bill and argues for its passage. The minority party also puts forth a debate on the bill āŖ Committee/consideration; The bill is discussed clause by clause and all concerns are debated and voted upon. The Attorney Generalās Department redrafts the bill, incorporating all amendments. āŖ See political manoeuvers used at this stage to keep parliament on schedule (Winnowing sessions, guillotine and kangaroo) THE LEGISLATIVE PROCESS contād āŖ Third reading; Parliament continues to debate the principles of the bill. If clauses are not reviewed properly, the bill is reverted to the committee stage. Where reviewed bill has no further amendments, parliamentarians vote for or against its passage. āŖ Finally, the bill is sent for presidential assent. āŖ The president may assent to the bill, refuse to assent or refer the bill to the Council of State for further action āŖ If the President assents, the bill becomes law. The new law is published in the Gazette and enters into force. āŖ Under what circumstances is the Presidentās obligatory assent expected? ROLES OF ORGANS OF GOVERNMENT IN LAW- MAKING āŖ Law-making power is distributed between Parliament, which passes the bill, and the President, who assents it. āŖ Law-making is a legal matter and hence the Attorney General advises on all legal matters, being responsible for all governmentās legal documents, verifying constitutionality of legal issues and assessing the soundness and appropriateness of all legal matters. āŖ The Parliamentary Counsel under the Attorney Generalās Office, drafts all legislative documents and the bills. ROLES OF ORGANS OF GOVERNMENT IN LAW-MAKING contād āŖ Before bills are introduced in parliament, after being passed by parliament and after the presidential assent when the bill becomes a law, they must be published in the Gazette. āŖ Civil society and the public are included in the law-making process through the publication in the Gazette and through public hearings/investigations conducted by the Committees of Parliament. EFFECTIVENESS OF THE GHANAIAN LEGISLATIVE PROCESS āŖ The legislative process of Ghana is considered very effective. āŖ The use of Parliamentary Counsel as the sole drafters of legislative documents is effective, because the average Member of Parliament may not have the necessary resources to draft the legislation. āŖ There should however be increased efforts in raising public participation in law making Actors in Policy Determinationā¦ The Administrative Agencies and Bureaucrats āŖ This refers to large organizations that manage government programmes. āŖ They are usually firmly ordered systems with a hierarchy that allows for supervision of lower offices by higher ones. āŖ It also has well-trained staff. These include: āŖ Governmental authorities in charge of natural resources (e.g. Forestry Commission, Water Resource Commission, Fisheries Commission) āŖ Related governmental set up (e.g. EPA) Usually the governmental natural resource authority plays the most prominent role but their role is strongly influenced by other sectors of government e.g. the ministries. Actors in Policy Determinationā¦ The Judiciary āŖ Consist mainly of the law enforcement body (the court system) āŖ They review the activities of the legislature and the executive to ensure their activities are within the confines of the law. Actors in Policy Determinationā¦ Unofficial Actors They include: āŖ Individual citizens āŖ Interest groups āŖ Political parties āŖ Technical and financial institutions āŖ Research organizations and advisory units āŖ Communication media āŖ Etc. Actors in Policy Determinationā¦ Interest Groups āŖ These consist of people with some stake in natural resources. They include groups concerned with conservation e.g. NGOs, professional associations (e.g. GIF), industrial associations (e.g. GTMO, Kumasi Wood Cluster (KWC)), etc. āŖ They may be permanent or temporary. āŖ These groups strongly advocate for their interests or objectives to be considered in the policy Actors in Policy Determinationā¦ Interest Groups... āŖ Effectiveness of an interest group in policy determination depends on: āŖ Interest āŖ Power āŖ Access āŖ If all members share similar interest, their influence would be greater āŖ Power - capacity of the group to command the attention of policy makers. This is mainly related to the size and financial resources of the group. āŖ If a group has greater access to policy makers, they are more likely to influence decision making. Actors in Policy Determinationā¦ Technical and Financial Institutions āŖ These may be bilateral or multilateral āŖ They provide expert advice, information and financial resources āŖ Sometimes their support is based on accepting certain policy conditions/recommendations āŖ They are very influential in policy making particularly in less developed countries Actors in Policy Determinationā¦ Researchers and Advisory Units They provide information on various component of the policy and how to implement to ensure effectiveness. These may or may not be commissioned to make an input into policy making Content of NR Policies āŖ The content of different natural resource policies vary. āŖ Basically however, a NR policy may have the following features: āŖ Background āŖ Guiding Principles āŖ Aims and objectives āŖ Strategies These features are usually presented in two broad parts: āŖ Introductory section āŖ Policy statement Content of NR Policiesā¦ Introductory Section Provides information on the basis for the policy āŖ Preamble:- Gives a summary of what the policy is about āŖ Background:- History of the resource ā its condition and how it has been managed, why the need for the policy ā any changes that has necessitated the current policy āŖ Guiding principles: - Gives the context for policy formulation. It also defines national priorities and international conventions the policy seeks to align with Content of NR Policiesā¦ Policy Statement āŖ This mainly consists of: āŖ Aim and objectives āŖ Strategies āŖ Aim and objectives āŖ This clearly indicates what the resource is being managed for and the expected resource condition within a given period of time āŖ The objectives may be temporary or long term āŖ The aims and objectives should be derived from societyās needs and therefore closely linked to broader national goals Content of NR Policiesā¦ Policy Statement Aim and objectives..... āŖ Example: āŖ āConservation and sustainable development of the nationās forest and wildlife resources for the maintenance of environmental quality and perpetual flow of optimum benefits to all segments of societyā (FWP, 1994) āŖ āthe conservation and sustainable development of forest and wildlife resources for the maintenance of environmental stability and continuous flow of optimum benefits from the socio-cultural and economic goods and services that the forest environment provides to the present and future generations whilst fulfilling Ghanaās commitments under international agreements and conventionsā (FWP, 2012) Content of NR Policiesā¦ Aim and Objectivesā¦. Basically, a NR policy should address the following: āŖ Sustainable development of the resource āŖ Provision for the multiple use of the resource āŖ Protection of the resource āŖ Deforestation āŖ Degradation āŖ Biodiversity loss āŖ Etc. āŖ Maintenance, restoration and enhancement of the protective functions of the resource (ecosystem services) āŖ Provision for productive functions āŖ Preservation of resource Content of NR Policiesā¦ Specific considerations in the formulation of policy objectives 1. Role of the resource in national economy and social welfare āŖ Economic and social welfare parameters:- employment, GDP, health, recreation, etc āŖ How can the resource contribute to these? āŖ job creation, increased income and living standards? How? āŖ Reforestation/plantation development, aquaculture, agroforestry, etc.? āŖ Provision of loans, tax holidays for beginners in RNR business and promote expansion of industry? āŖ Set up extension support for such services, marketing support? Content of NR Policiesā¦ Specific considerations in the formulation of policy objectives 1. Role of the resource in national economy and social welfare.... āŖ How can the resource contribute ā¦ā¦ āŖ Integrated rural development ā Forest + Agric + water supply? āŖ Should provision of state amenities (electricity, water, education...) be dependent on resource development activities? Should social amenities be provided for resource dependent communities to discourage migration to urban areas? āŖ Support resource management programmes on non-state lands for the production of fodder, fuel wood, building materials, wildlife, fish, etc to meet local demands? āŖ Should state make it an objective to increase supply of wood for fuel through plantations (woodlots) to address energy needs? Content of NR Policiesā¦ Specific considerations in the formulation of policy objectivesā¦ 2. Relation between state and private management of NR āŖ Is there private and communal ownership of natural resource (plantations, agro-forests, fish farms)? āŖ To what extent should the state interfere in private management? āŖ Exploitation of resource? āŖ Marketing of products? āŖ Value addition? āŖ Should state resources be given to private and communal ownership/management? {e.g. do we allow private investors to assist in re-planting degraded forest reserves? Under what conditions?} āŖ etc Content of NR Policiesā¦ Specific considerations in the formulation of policy objectivesā¦ 3. Establishment, size and maintenance of state forest and wild lands āŖ This consideration is on designating specific areas as national parks, protected areas, strict nature reserves, forest reserves, etc. āŖ If a country does not have these areas established at the time of developing its policy, the objectives of the policy should consider whether these areas are needed āŖ Usually the objectives for managing state forests and wildlands are to ensure: āŖ Multiple Use (recreation, production) āŖ Sustainable supply of products (fish, water, NTFPs, timber, etc.) āŖ Protection of resource Content of NR Policiesā¦ Specific considerations in the formulation of policy objectivesā¦ 3. Establishment, size, maintenance and management of state forest and wild lands... āŖ What should be the size of these state resource areas? E.g. Set limit of land (resource) that could be owned/managed by the state āŖ How would these state resources be maintained? āŖ What should state natural resource areas be managed for? āŖ Which set of multiple uses would be pursued in which areas āŖ Dilemma between production and protective/ environmental functions āŖ Which other sectors would be involved in the management of these resources? āŖ How do we co-ordinate the work of all those sectors Content of NR Policiesā¦ Specific considerations in the formulation of policy objectivesā¦ 4. Natural resource based industries and marketing Some of the considerations include the following: āŖ Who could own such industries? āŖ To what extent should the state be involved in the management and development of the industries? āŖ Establish them? āŖ Give employment quotas? āŖ Supply raw materials? āŖ Regulate use of raw materials---e.g. value addition? āŖ Control of transportation, imports & exports of products? āŖ Control prices? Content of NR Policiesā¦ Specific considerations in the formulation of policy objectives 5. Education and Training āŖ This objective aims at ensuring the availability of competent human resource at various levels of resource management āŖ Some of the considerations include: āŖ State establish and operate education and training facilities? āŖ If so, at what level? āŖ If not, which people should manage such facilities āŖ To what extent would the state be involved?---provision of financial support, review of curricula, etc. Content of NR Policiesā¦ Specific considerations in the formulation of policy objectives 6. Environmental protection āŖ Management of natural resources have environmental consequences āŖ Should the state require environmental impact assessment? Which organization /agency would implement and monitor that? āŖ Payment for environmental services? How? āŖ How to reduce emissions? āŖ Use āpolluter paysā principle? Under what conditions? Reflection Why would you expect the forest policy of Ghana to be the different from that of Great Britain? Natural Resource Policy Development Case Video on a national policy development process in Montenegro: Natural Resource Policy Development Case Video on a national policy development process in Montenegro: Key features from the video: oHow important the forest is to the people oHow their appreciation of the role of forests has evolved oActors in the policy making process oSteps in the policy making process oForest management priorities the policy highlighted Natural Resource Policy Development Case āŖ National Forest Policy Development Process.mp4 Natural Resource Policy Process NR Policy Process The policy cycle ā Example 1 NR Policy Process The policy cycle: Example 2 NR Policy Process The policy cycle: Example 3 NR Policy Making āŖThis involves two main stages āŖ Policy Formation āŖ Policy Formulation āŖPolicy Formation: Various process for arriving at the policy. Through these processes various policy options are considered and policy choices are made. āŖPolicy Formulation: Formal statement of the policy NR Policy Making āŖThe process involves: āŖ Data Collection (information gathering) āŖ Analysis of results and options āŖ Formulation of objectives āŖ Determination of strategies NR Policy Making Data Collection āŖ This involves gathering all information relevant for the policy āŖ The kind of information required depends on whether the policy to be formulated is the first of its kind or a review of an existing one. āŖ Kind of data to be collected: āŖ Resource related factors āŖ People related factors Resource related factors āŖ Biological nature of the resource āŖ Location and distribution āŖ Environmental factors NR Policy Making Data Collectionā¦ People related factors āŖKnowledge about the resource (including Indigenous Knowledge) āŖCurrent and potential use of the resource āŖEconomic importance of resource to the people ā export/import, contribution to livelihoods, etc. āŖSocio-cultural significance of the resource āŖLocal taboos and laws on the resource NR Policy Making Data collectionā¦ Who collects data? āŖ Usually initiated by Government āŖ Governmental agencies in charge of the NR sector spearhead the data collection process āŖ Other natural resource related institutions may support the process NR Policy Making Data collectionā¦ Sources of Data āŖ Two major sources āŖ Primary ā data collected from the field and from people at the time of policy making āŖ Secondary ā already existing data from books, journals, reports, etc. NR Policy Making Data collectionā¦ Importance of public involvement in policy making āŖ Helps to tap local knowledge outside what is known by technical resource management. āŖ Enhances incorporation of public resource-related needs and perceptions about already existing arrangementsā¦.thus producing a more acceptable policy āŖ People identify with the process and feel a part of the policy that finally comes out----they are thus more likely to be committed to its implementation NR Policy Making Data collectionā¦ Methods of stakeholder consultation Formal: āŖ Questionnaire administration āŖ Interviews āŖ Focus Group Discussions āŖ Technical working group āŖ Workshops Informal: āŖ Observation āŖ Informal discussions The selection of method is dependent on the stakeholders in question and the specific information required. NR Policy Making Analysis Of Results And Options āŖ Aims at relating information obtained from data collection to the policy. āŖ The major question is: āwhat do the results mean for the policy?ā Focus of people-related data analysis: āWho/which category of people had which opinion? āWhat roles do such people play in society and what are their power relationships? āHow many people shared a particular view? āHow strongly were such views expressed? NR Policy Making Analysis Of Results And Optionsā¦ Means of analyzing options āŖ Cost benefit analysis āŖ Internal Rate of Return (IRR) āŖ SWOT analysis āŖ Forecasting āŖ Thematic analysis āŖ Expert consultations and brainstorming NR Policy Making Analysis Of Results And Optionsā¦ āŖ Choice of data analysis method is dependent on the kind of data āŖ Once analysis is complete, choice of option(s) should be made from alternative courses of action. NR Policy Making Formulation of objectives and strategies āŖ Objectives are formulated based on the agreed course of action and strategies for achieving the desired objectives are also determined. āŖ Refer to previous lecture materials for information on formulation of policy objectives Policy Implementation Policy Implementation Introductory discussion āŖIn practice, do bureaucracies (e.g. FC, WRC) implement natural resource policies as they are formulated in policy documents? āŖGive reasons Policy Implementation āŖ Once a policy is formulated the next important stage is its implementation. āŖ Without effective implementation, policies are of little relevance āŖ Policy implementation is the process by which enacted policies are put into effect by relevant agencies āŖ It is naĆÆve to assume that bureaucracies (government agencies ā FC, Fisheries Institutions, etc.) are neutral institutions that would implement policies exactly the way the legislature intends. Policy Implementation āAdministrators give shape to the policy process in two ways. As advisors, they influence policy determination, and as implementers, they become decision makers in routine but nevertheless, extremely important mattersā Politics of resource management: āPower to adviseā Vrs. āPower to decideā Policy Implementation āŖ Roles of various actors in policy implementation should be clearly defined āŖ Government (Ministries) āŖ Bureaucrats (Forestry Commission, Water Resources Commission, Fisheries Commission, etc) āŖ Local government āŖ Private sector āŖ NGOs āŖ Need for education on policies and their rationale: āŖ among staff of implementing agencies āŖ Stakeholders affected by policies āŖ Address the problem of language, format of communications, etc. Policy Implementation āŖEffective implementation requires: āŖ Programmes āŖ Programmes are definite and planned actions to operationalize policies or make policies effective āŖ Laws āŖ Funding āŖ Logistics ā transportation, equipment, supplies āŖ Administration āŖ Personnel āŖ Supervision, coordination and control Policy Implementation āŖThe policy implementation process should always be monitored to: āŖ ensure the policy is achieving its desired output āŖlearn lessons for improving the policy or the implementation process Policy Implementation If you wish to study how the current National Climate Change Policy is being implemented, how will you go about it? Policy Implementation āŖPolicy implementation may be studied through the following approaches: āŖTop-down āŖBottom-up Policy Implementation Top-down approaches to policy implementation study āŖ Starts with understanding the goals and motivations of the highest-level initiators of policy āŖ Tracks the policy through its implementation at the lowest level āŖ (Street level bureaucrats..actors at the point of contact with policyās target group e.g. Forestry Technical Officers, Teachers, Police Officers etc.). Policy Implementation Top-down approaches.... Assumptions: āŖ Policy has clearly defined goals against which performance can be measured. āŖ Policy contains clearly defined tools/strategies for the accomplishment of goals āŖ Policy makers know the capacity and commitment of implementing organization: āŖ Capacity ā availability of resources for implementation āŖ Commitment ā desire of implementers to carry out goals of top-level policy makers Policy Implementation Top-down approaches... With the top-down approach, implementers assume that: - Policy is good and enforceable - Problems with the policy can be overcome āŖ The approach thus focuses on creating structures and controls that would ensure compliance with the policy goals. Policy Implementation Problems with top-down approach āŖ Without clearly agreed goals/objectives it is difficult to evaluate the success of the policy āŖ There is indeed no single clear body that can be seen as the ātopā. They are influenced by a number of other structures āe.g. local structures, NGOs, etc. that affect implementation. Thus government is probably only able to set bounds for implementation. āŖ Local actors could ignore directives from the ātopā on how policy is to be implemented Reflecting on policy implementation Reflection on policy implementation Policy Implementation Bottom-up approach āŖ Begins by understanding the goals, motivations and capacities of the lowest level implementers and then follows the policy design upwards to the highest-level initiators. āŖ This is based on a recognition that goals are usually not explicit but ambiguous and may even conflict with the motivations of the street- level bureaucrats. Policy Implementation Bottom-up approach āŖ It is mainly concerned with how conflicts can be alleviated rather than compliance. āŖ It is argued that this approach overemphasizes the ability of street-level bureaucrats to frustrate policy making processes. Policy Implementation Top-up Vrs Bottom-up āŖThe best approach for studying implementation depends on the context. āŖTop-down----useful when studying a specific dominant programme and when resources are limited āŖBottom-up ----- better when studying a multifaceted concept. Tenure Issues And NR Policies āŖ Tenure generally means the right to use a resource for a period of time. āŖ It defines the bundle of rights and privileges associated with a particular resource. āŖ There are different types of rights: āŖ access right āŖ use right āŖ decision-making right āŖ exclusion right āŖ etc. āŖ The most comprehensive bundle of rights is the ownership right. It encompasses the right to use, make decisions on, sell or lease a resource. Tenure Issues And NR Policies āŖ Tenure is seen as a critical variable in the sustainable management of natural resources. āŖ Three key characteristics of tenure required: āŖ Clear āŖ Secure āŖ Long-term āŖ Why can we not be assured of responsible use of NR without these key characteristics of tenure? Tenure Issues And NR Policies Complexities with tenure issues āOwnership may be contested āLegal ownership may not be reflected in de facto control āTenure may be unclear because records are incomplete or contradictory āIt may sometimes be difficult to distinguish between categories of tenure āTenure may be allocated among multiple persons āTree tenure may differ from land tenure Tenure Issues And NR Policies Complexities with tenure issuesā¦ āOwnership may be contested āIn many countries, even where the state asserts its ownership over forests, large areas may be subject to the claims of indigenous or other community-based groups āWhen issues of disputes are not resolved, it results in the state of uneasy standoff, confusion and open conflicts. āLegal ownership may not be reflected in de facto control āThe presence of state ownership sometimes disrupts traditional forest management without providing alternatives. āTraditional institutions, though formally holding rights to forests, have become dysfunctional or are no longer seen as legitimate by local people. Tenure Issues And NR Policies Complexities with tenure issuesā¦ āTenure may be unclear because records are incomplete or contradictory āOften it is simply unclear whether an area falls within a state forest or not āDemarcation may not be completed Example; āIn Turkey, forest and agricultural cadasters often do not match āIt may sometimes be difficult to distinguish between categories āDifficulties in drawing lines between state, private and customary categories of ownership Tenure Issues And NR Policies Complexities with tenure issuesā¦ āTenure may be allocated among multiple persons āDifferent rights over forest - right of access, management, harvest and so on - may be allocated to a number of persons. āThis makes identification of someone as the āownerā of a forest difficult Discuss with the case of forest/land ownership in Ghana āTree tenure may differ from land tenure āOwnership of forest land may not mean legal power over the trees on it if in a particular legal system, land tenure and tree tenure are separable. āSome customary systems, for example, firmly recognize individual ownership of trees but rights to the land under them may be subject to reallocation āTree tenure in forestry related projects Discuss handout on tree tenure and benefit sharing framework in Ghana and link to cocoa sector Tenure Issues And NR Policies We will consider three kinds of natural resource ownership: āPrivate āState and āCustomary Tenure Issues And NR Policies Advantages of private ownership āŖPrivate owners are more likely to show a sense of responsibility and ensure efficiency in management. āŖ Less bureaucracy āŖRealizes full economic potential of resources. āŖ Government usually unable to charge economic rates for resource use for socio-political reasons. āŖ Better payment to employees Tenure Issues And NR Policies Challenges/demerits of private ownership āŖConflict of interest: āŖ Private owners are usually profit oriented. Sometimes what society wants might not bring them adequate returns in terms of revenue. āŖ The cost involved in providing what would please society might be too high. Sometimes they even tend to neglect their social responsibilities āŖ The returns might be too far in the future. This is a disincentive to the private sector which usually wants returns in the shortest possible period. Tenure Issues And NR Policies Challenges/demerits of private ownershipā¦ āŖCould be wasteful ā leaving out uses of natural resources useful for society but without adequate financial returns āŖLack of information and knowledge on best resource management approaches. āŖLack of capability to carry out certain required operations: āŖ lack of appropriate technology/equipment āŖ Limited financial capacity to bear certain costs (e.g. research). Tenure Issues And NR Policies State Ownership of RNR āŖWhy the need for state involvement in RNR management āŖ Ability to support multiple uses of natural resources: āŖ The state is not only working for profit and therefore can better safeguard the multiple uses. E.g. carbon sequestration āŖ Better efficiency in the management of large areas because it can benefit from economies of scale. āŖ Can employ one professional forester to take care of a whole district Tenure Issues And NR Policies Why the need for state involvement in RNR management.... āŖ To ensure equitable distribution of benefits from the resources āŖ Resources not evenly distributed and should not be appropriated by a privileged few āŖ To provide support to and regulate activities of the private sector Tenure Issues And NR Policies Government support for private owners āŖ Support may be in the form of direct or indirect incentives. āŖDirect incentives āŖGrants or loans to private owners āŖCost sharing āŖ E.g. for the protection of wetlands within private property Tenure Issues And NR Policies Government support for private owners āŖDirect incentives ā¦ āŖ Provision of services āŖ technical advice for marketing, value addition āŖ Fiscal support āŖ tax holidays āŖ tax rebates (tax relief) āŖ Reduce uncertainties āŖ Price guarantee through economic projections āŖ loan guarantee āŖ land tenure security. Tenure Issues And NR Policies Government support for private owners āŖIndirect incentives āŖResearch āŖ providing logistics/personnel for research āŖ making research information available to the private owner. āŖEducation āŖ Organising seminars, workshops, informal education āŖ Formal education in NRM and related disciplines Tenure Issues And NR Policies Government support for private owners āŖIndirect incentivesā¦ āŖ Involvement in policy formulation āŖ Allow private owners contribute to policy decision-making. This makes implementation easier. āŖ Removal of unnecessary bureaucratic processes āŖ Land acquisition āŖ Property registration āŖ Permit acquisition and renewal Tenure Issues And NR Policies State regulation of private ownership āŖThis is to reduce the negative tendencies that could possibly result from private ownership Forms of state regulation āŖ Compulsory conservation of some existing resources- āŖ no deforestation āŖ creation of permanent forest estate Tenure Issues And NR Policies Forms of state regulation... āŖRestrictions on how management should be carried out. āŖ Reforest degraded areas and ensure regeneration after logging. āŖ Restriction on harvesting levels and minimum girth size. āŖ Restriction on silvicultural operations to be used. Tenure Issues And NR Policies Techniques of state regulation of private ownership āŖ Punitive taxation āŖ Policing and Prosecution āŖ patrols, arrests āŖ Issuing of permits and license āŖ works better if they are renewable āŖ Zoning of forest land by state to ensure multiple use Tenure Issues And NR Policies Customary and legal tenure āŖMany local communities have their own tenure systems āŖThese are administered by local authorities who are: āŖaccepted by the local people, āŖexpected to serve their interest and āŖ legitimately address conflicts over the resource āŖThe state gets involved in these customary tenure systems to varying extents in different countries. Tenure Issues And NR Policies Customary and legal tenureā¦ āŖIn many developing countries (Africa, Asia), local tenure arrangements are not completely abolished. āŖ They operate alongside or are interwoven into legal tenure arrangements Tenure Issues And NR Policies Some customary tenure arrangements āŖ Distinction made between three categories of land: āŖ Individual lands ā usually for agriculture, heavy labour investments āŖ Communal land ā usually grazing land or forests, moderate investments āŖ āOpen accessā landsā Usually remote from communities, used occasionally, no strong ownership rights Tenure Issues And NR Policies Some customary tenure arrangements.... āŖDistinction between the rights of communities fringing a natural resource area and non-fringe communities āŖDistinction between the rights of migrants and indigenes āŖāNaturally growingā or āself-sownā trees, water bodies, wildlife regarded as communal or common property Tenure Issues And NR Policies Some customary tenure arrangements... āŖ Investment in the development of resources (tree planting, aquaculture etc.) gives investors stronger tenure rights āŖ As investment in natural resource development also lengthens and strengthens claim to land, there are sometimes strict regulations on such investments especially by tenants (migrants) and sharecroppers. Tenure Issues And NR Policies Challenges of customary tenure āŖ Sometimes communities become too stratified to manage communal resources effectively āŖ Most communal and open access lands rich in natural resources taken over as public lands by colonial and post-colonial governments (forest reserves, protected areas) leading to disenfranchisement of communal land right -holders (E.g. African pastoralists) āŖ Systems for royalty payment, where applicable, sometimes ineffective or lacking transparency and accountability Tenure Issues And NR Policies Policy implications of customary tenure āŖRecognition of customary tenure systems in legal arrangements āŖNo need to revive communal tenure systems where they no longer work āŖEnsure good governance of royalty payment systems Laws and legislation āŖ What is a law? āŖ set of rules considered binding on a whole community. āŖ set of enforceable rules that are officially recognised. āŖ Legislation refers to those laws enacted by legislative authorities of a country over time. āŖ Some authors consider common law accumulated through the judicial practice and customary law from traditional practice also as legislation. Laws and legislationā¦ āŖ Laws provide the legal instrument for putting the objectives of policies into effect. āŖ It translates objectives into specific legal provisions (e.g. to govern the use and management of natural resources) āŖ Laws (governing natural resources) need to be revised or changed (abrogated, repealed) especially when policies are reviewed, to keep them relevant. Characteristics of laws āŖLaws should be binding on all the people in the community. āŖIt should be enforceable. āŖIt should be officially recognised. āŖIt should be related to public interest. āŖIt should reflect rights and duties. āŖIt should be acceptable. Functions of Laws (General) āŖ Define and regulate relationships between individuals and groups. āŖ Maintain order. āŖ Needed for the settling disputes. āŖ Ensure freedom and justice (without it, life becomes a survival of the fittest). Functions of natural resource laws and legislation āŖ They define the roles and responsibilities of governmental agency and how they should be carried out āŖ Forestry Commission Act āŖ They show how resources (goods and services) are to be used/exploited, transported and marketed, giving limits, prohibitions and sanctions. āŖ Control and Prevention of bush fire law āŖ Timber Resource Management Act āŖ Timber Resource Management and Legality Licensing Regulations āŖ Wildlife Resources Management Act āŖ Laws may indicate incentives or rewards for certain natural resource related activities in accordance with policy objectives (funds, technical assistance, tax exemptions) āŖ Forest Plantations Development Fund Act Natural resource laws and laws of other related sectors āŖ Natural resource laws do not operate in isolation; they are affected (directly or indirectly) by laws of other sectors: āŖ Land āŖ Tenure āŖ Land use planning āŖ Agriculture āŖ Expansion programs āŖ Transportation āŖ Finance āŖ tax Format of Natural resource laws āŖ No blueprints or universal procedure for law making or format for laws āŖ Generally, however, NR laws are structured as follows: āŖ An identification (name, number, date.....) āŖ Reference to previous laws related to current law āŖ Purpose and justification āŖ Main body of the law, placed in sections and labelled as articles, sections, titles, parts or chapters. Sections may address: āŖ Definition of terms used in the law to ensure correct interpretation āŖ Specific provisions of the law āŖ Penalties and sanctions Types of laws āŖLaws categorized in different ways based on: āŖA. Authority issuing the law āŖB. Who the law affects āŖC. Lawās boundary of operation Types of lawsā¦ āŖ A. Based on the authority issuing the law: āŖ Statute law āŖ Common law āŖ Delegate legislation Types of lawsā¦ Statute Law āŖIt is a law made by parliament. It is also called legislation. āŖEach piece of legislation is called an act of parliament. Common Law āŖLaws made by judges in court, during court hearing. āŖStatute law surpasses common law āŖMost of Ghanaās common laws were inherited from British colonialism. Types of lawsā¦ Delegated Legislation āŖIt is law made by subordinate authority such as the ministries. āŖThese subordinates are given the power to make such laws by parliament through enabling Acts. āŖThese delegated legislation are also called subordinate legislation. E.g. Timber Resource Management and Legality Licensing Regulations, 2017 (LI 2254) Types of lawsā¦ B. Based on who the law affects āŖ Private āŖ Public Public Laws āŖThese are laws that affect everyone in a given domain. āŖThe purpose of public laws is to deal with disputes between the state, citizens and law making powers of government. āŖThere are four main areas of public law:- āŖ Administrative law āŖ Constitutional law āŖ Criminal law āŖ Industrial law Types of lawsā¦ Administrative Law āŖThese are laws that deal with how government departments should work; their rights and their duties/responsibility towards citizens. Constitutional Law āŖDeals with the powers of various governments. E.g. whether government can impose certain kinds of taxes or not will be settled by constitutional law. (Refer to our videos on the constitution) Criminal Law āŖDeals with behaviours seen as damaging to society. E.g. murder, armed robbery. Industrial Law āŖDeals with employment and employees e.g. Minimum wages of employees, their performance, behaviour and work ethics, etc. Types of lawsā¦ Private Laws āŖLaws dealing with disputes between private citizens. āŖIts purpose is to decide on disputes between individuals to ensure fair and peaceful outcomes. āŖFour main areas of private laws: āŖ Contract laws. āŖ Torts. āŖ Family laws. āŖ Property laws. Types of lawsā¦ Contract Laws āŖDeal with agreements made between people with regards to specific transactions such as buying and selling a house, etc. Torts āŖDeal with the behaviour of people who injure others or their property. āŖA tort is a wrongful act committed against someone else -trespass, negligence or defamation. Family Laws āŖDeal with disputes arising between husband and wife, between divorced couples, between parents and children, etc. Property Laws āŖDeal with issues concerning people and their belongings - land, farms, etc. Types of lawsā¦ C. Based on the lawās boundary of operation āŖDomestic āŖInternational Types of lawsā¦ Domestic Laws āŖLaws that operate within the boundaries of a country, nation or state. āŖIts purpose is to regulate the society within the borders of a nation. Example: āŖGhanaās 1992 Constitution āŖWildlife Resources Management Act, 2023 (Act 1115) Types of laws International Laws āŖLaws that go beyond the boundaries of a single nation to affect two or more nations āŖE.g. international conventions International laws on renewable natural resources āŖ These are legal agreements or guiding rules agreed on by a group of people from different countries concerning the use and management of renewable natural resources. āŖ They are variously referred to as conventions, protocols, treaties or simply agreements. āŖ These international laws are usually formulated to deal with specific subjects. āŖ E.g. The Convention on International Trade in Endangered Species of Wild flora and fauna (CITES) was specifically formulated to deal with trading in endangered species of plants and animals. Procedure for developing international conventions āŖ Basically developed in three stages: āŖ Negotiation stage āŖ Ratification stage āŖ Operational stage Procedure for developing international conventionsā¦ Procedure for developing international conventionsā¦ Negotiation stage āŖHere the parties concerned (representatives of different countries) discuss possible alternatives for dealing with a particular subject of interest. āŖThis stage is meant to allow the parties present to come to a consensus on what should be done about the subject matter. āŖOnce this is achieved, technical experts draft the text on what has been agreed on. āŖThe parties at the negotiation then initial this document. At this stage, a nation can be considered as having signed the convention. Procedure for developing international conventionsā¦ Ratification stage āŖHere the signatories to the convention present the content of the document to their countries for consideration. āŖThis may require presenting the document to parliament for study and possible approval. āŖTo show that the nation has formally ratified a convention, it should deposit an instrument of ratification at a designated office (depository). āŖThe instrument of ratification (IOR) shows the structures the country in question would put in place in accordance with the given convention. Procedure for developing international conventionsā¦ āŖ If a nation was not present at the initial negotiation of the convention, it could still become part of it later by accession. āŖ This is done by depositing an instrument of accession (IOA) indicating āŖ Why they were not present during negotiation āŖ Why they want to be part of it now āŖ The structures the country would put in place āŖ An office or someone is appointed to receive the instrument of ratification or instrument of accession āŖ CITES depository - US government āŖ CBD depository - UN secretary general Procedure for developing international conventionsā¦ Operational stage āŖAfter receiving an agreed minimum number of IOR or IOA, a convention becomes operational. āŖThus some conventions are documented as being signed on a certain date but comes into force on another date. Enforcement of international conventions āŖ Even though some conventions have legal implications e.g. at the international court of justice, most conventions are not legally binding. āŖ Thus, Ghana for instance cannot be taken to court for not implementing the provisions of a convention that it has ratified. āŖ The enforcement of such convention is thus left to the use of moral pressure, which can work effectively if appropriately applied. āŖ E.g. World Bank loans tied to fulfilment of requirements of some conventions. THANK YOU